Search

Wallpaper of the Week - #themetroproject II

Ad

Following up our comeback with the Wallpaper of the Week series, it’s crazy to imagine there’s more than 350+ wallpapers available to download for your different screen resolutions. Things have changed ever since so we decided to change the formula, each week we’ll try our best to publish one of our own pictures as a challenge. Let us know of your thoughts or suggestions so we can adjust for future endeavors.

For this week’s wallpaper, we are sharing this image by François Hoang (me) for a photo project that I’ll try to put it online very soon. For the meantime, here’s an image from Montreal and its famous underground city. I’ve never been to this spot before, it was quite a joy to discover in your own eyes. This wallpaper is available for mobile only.

Ad

Related

Following up our comeback with the Wallpaper of the Week series, it’s crazy to imagine there’s more than 350+ wallpapers available to download for your different screen resolutions. Things have changed ever since so we decided to change the formula. Let us know of your thoughts or suggestions so we can adjust for future endeavors.

The wallpaper of this week is an image we created a couple of weeks a go for one of our tutorials, the Impossible ABDZ in Illustrator. If you follow the tutorial you might remember one of the steps that we had a render version that was heavily inspired by the game Monument Valley.
For more information check out the tutorial at http://abduzeedo.com/impossible-abdz-illustrator

Following up our comeback with the Wallpaper of the Week series, it’s crazy to imagine there’s more than 350+ wallpapers available to download for your different screen resolutions. Things have changed ever since so we decided to change the formula, each week we’ll try our best to publish one of our own pictures as a challenge. Let us know of your thoughts or suggestions so we can adjust for future endeavors.

The wallpaper of this week is an amazing image from a powerful jet from a supermassive black hole in galaxy system 3C 321. The image is from http://thehubblesite.org.
At the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI), we're working hard to study and explain the once-unimaginable celestial phenomena now made visible using Hubble's cutting-edge technology.